This weeks' new face was Colin (yes, we had two Colins) who regaled us with stories strange and wonderful, and often funny. It wouldn't be polite or particularly useful to recount his stories here, but one went something like this.
We were also joined by Dave and Pauline, who are occasional regulars at the club. Dave's contributions included Gordon Lightfoot's Sit down young stranger. Pauline started off saying she hadn't brought any words but she kept pulling songs out through the evening and her contribution included the Eriskay love lilt.

Derek introduced a theme for himself of 26 August. He started with The Donibristle disaster which tells of the Donibristle Mining Disaster in Fife, which occurred on 26 August 1901 when part of the Mossmorran peat bog near Cowdenbeath collapsed on sixteen miners 360 feet underground. Four miners were lost, as was the four-strong rescue party remembered in the song. All the bodies were recovered between September and December that year.

Derek's second song was They don't sing me any more, which is his own song, each verse anthropomorphising a song and suggesting that singers now write their own songs rather than singing the old songs. The irony of writing a song on this subject is not lost on Derek! The third verse mentions Thomas Rattery, a member of the rescue party following the aforementioned Donibristle disaster, and mentioned in that song.

Derek was going to continue his 26 August theme with a song about the Dublin Transport Strike of 1913 which started on that date but very unusually for Derek, he got the verses mixed up and gave up. It's good to see that everyone is fallible sometimes. Instead he gave us Bonnie house o' Airlie.

I don't want to give the impression that the whole evening consisted of Derek's fine ballad singing, far from it.

Richard's singing also included a song he wrote himself: Ossett, inspired by a Yorkshire saying, cited by Austin Mitchell in his book Talkin' Yorksher. The saying is: "Don't 'thee thou' me 'thee thou' thissen and see how tha likes 'thee thouin''".